Stories of Later American History
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Stories of Later American History - Wilbur F. Gordy
Wilbur F. Gordy
Stories of Later American History
Published by Good Press, 2022
EAN 4057664614032
Table of Contents
PREFACE
ILLUSTRATIONS
MAPS
STORIES OF LATER AMERICAN HISTORY
PATRICK HENRY
PATRICK HENRY’S FIERY SPEECH AGAINST THE STAMP ACT
ANOTHER GREAT SPEECH BY PATRICK HENRY
SAMUEL ADAMS
SAMUEL ADAMS AN INSPIRING LEADER
SAMUEL ADAMS AND THE BOSTON TEA PARTY
SOME RESULTS OF THE BOSTON TEA PARTY
THE WAR BEGINS NEAR BOSTON
THE BATTLE OF LEXINGTON AND CONCORD
GEORGE WASHINGTON IN THE REVOLUTION
WASHINGTON IN COMMAND OF THE ARMY
THE HEROIC NATHAN HALE
A TIME OF TRIAL FOR WASHINGTON
THE VICTORY AT TRENTON
BURGOYNE’S INVASION
LAFAYETTE JOINS THE AMERICAN ARMY
NATHANAEL GREENE AND OTHER HEROES IN THE SOUTH
GENERAL GREENE IN THE SOUTH
DANIEL MORGAN, THE GREAT RIFLEMAN
MARION, THE SWAMP FOX
JOHN PAUL JONES
A DESPERATE SEA DUEL
DANIEL BOONE
BOONE GOES TO KENTUCKY
THE KENTUCKY SETTLERS AT BOONESBOROUGH
JAMES ROBERTSON
HOW THE BACKWOODSMEN LIVED
ROBERTSON A BRAVE LEADER
ROBERTSON SAVES THE SETTLEMENT
JOHN SEVIER
SEVIER A HERO AMONG THE TENNESSEE SETTLERS
GEORGE ROGERS CLARK
CLARK STARTS ON HIS LONG JOURNEY
LIFE IN THE OLD FRENCH VILLAGES
CLARK’S HARD TASK
CLARK CAPTURES VINCENNES
THE NEW REPUBLIC
THE COTTON-GIN AND SLAVERY
INCREASING THE SIZE OF THE NEW REPUBLIC
JEFFERSON’S GREATEST WORK AS A STATESMAN
NEW ORLEANS IN 1803
LEWIS AND CLARK’S EXPEDITION
ANDREW JACKSON
INTERNAL IMPROVEMENTS
THE NATIONAL ROAD AND THE ERIE CANAL
THE RAILROAD
MORSE AND THE TELEGRAPH
THE REPUBLIC GROWS LARGER
SAM HOUSTON
DAVID CROCKETT
JOHN C. FRÉMONT THE PATHFINDER
THE DISCOVERY OF GOLD
THREE GREAT STATESMEN
JOHN C. CALHOUN
HENRY CLAY
DANIEL WEBSTER
SLAVERY AND THE TARIFF
THE COMPROMISE OF 1850
THE CIVIL WAR
ABRAHAM LINCOLN
ABRAHAM LINCOLN AND SLAVERY
ROBERT E. LEE
STONEWALL
JACKSON
J.E.B. STUART
GETTYSBURG
ULYSSES S. GRANT
WILLIAM TECUMSEH SHERMAN
PHILIP H. SHERIDAN
TWO GREAT GENERALS
FOUR GREAT INDUSTRIES
COTTON
WHEAT
CATTLE-RAISING
COAL
The End
INDEX
PREFACE
Table of Contents
This book, like Stories of Early American History,
follows somewhat closely the course of study prepared by the Committee of Eight, the present volume covering the topics outlined for Grade V, while the earlier one includes the material suggested for Grade IV.
It was the plan of that committee to take up in these grades, largely in a biographical way, a great part of the essential facts of American history; and with this plan the author, who was a member of that committee, was in hearty accord. This method, it is believed, serves a double purpose. In the first place, it is the best possible way of laying the foundation for the later and more detailed study of United States history in the higher grammar grades by those pupils who are to continue in school; and in the second, it gives to that large number of pupils who will leave school before the end of the sixth grade—which is at least half of all the boys and girls in the schools of the country—some acquaintance with the leading men and prominent events of American history.
It is without doubt a great mistake to allow half of the pupils to go out from our public schools with almost no knowledge of the moral and material forces which have made this nation what it is to-day. It is an injustice to the young people themselves; it is also an injury to their country, the vigor of whose life will depend much upon their intelligent and patriotic support.
With this conviction, it has been the author’s desire to make the story of the events concrete, dramatic, and lifelike by centring them about leaders, heroes, and other representative men, in such a way as to appeal to the imagination and to influence the ideals of the child. In so doing, he has made no attempt to write organized history—tracing out its intricate relations of cause and effect. At the same time, however, he has aimed to select his facts and events so carefully that the spirit of our national life and institutions, as well as many of the typical events of American history, may be presented.
It is confidently hoped that the fine illustrations and the attractive typographical features of the book will help to bring vividly before the mind of the child the events narrated in the text.
Another aid in making the stories vivid will, it is intended, be found in Some Things to Think About.
These and many similar questions, which the teacher can easily frame to fit the needs of her class, will help the pupil to make real the life of days gone by as well as to connect it with the present time and with his own life.
In conclusion, I wish to acknowledge my deep obligations to Mr. Forrest Morgan, of the Watkinson Library, Hartford, and to Miss Elizabeth P. Peck, of the Hartford Public High School, both of whom have read the manuscript and have made many valuable criticisms and suggestions.
Wilbur F. Gordy.
Hartford, Conn.,
April 15, 1915.
CHAPTER
Patrick Henry
Samuel Adams
The War Begins near Boston
George Washington in the Revolution
Nathanael Greene and Other Heroes in the South
John Paul Jones
Daniel Boone
James Robertson
John Sevier
George Rogers Clark
The New Republic
Increasing the Size of the New Republic
Internal Improvements
The Republic Grows Larger
Three Great Statesmen
The Civil War
Four Great Industries
Index
ILLUSTRATIONS
Table of Contents
Pioneers on the Overland Route, Westward
George III
Patrick Henry
Patrick Henry Delivering His Speech in the Virginia House of Burgesses
William Pitt
St. John’s Church, Richmond
Samuel Adams
Patriots in New York Destroying Stamps Intended for Use in Connecticut
Faneuil Hall, Boston
Old South Church, Boston
The Boston Tea Party
Carpenters’ Hall, Philadelphia
John Hancock
John Hancock’s Home, Boston
A Minuteman
Old North Church
Paul Revere’s Ride
Monument on Lexington Common Marking the Line of the Minutemen
Concord Bridge
President Langdon, the President of Harvard College, Praying for the Bunker Hill Entrenching Party on Cambridge Common Just Before Their Departure
Prescott at Bunker Hill
Bunker Hill Monument
George Washington
Washington, Henry, and Pendleton on the Way to Congress at Philadelphia
The Washington Elm at Cambridge, under which Washington took Command of the Army
Sir William Howe
Thomas Jefferson Looking Over the Rough Draught of the Declaration of Independence
The Retreat from Long Island
Nathan Hale
British and Hessian Soldiers
Powder-Horn, Bullet-Flask, and Buckshot-Pouch Used in the Revolution
General Burgoyne Surrendering to General Gates
Marquis de Lafayette
Lafayette Offering His Services to Franklin
Winter at Valley Forge
Nathanael Greene
The Meeting of Greene and Gates upon Greene’s Assuming Command
Daniel Morgan
Francis Marion
Marion Surprising a British Wagon-Train
John Paul Jones
Battle Between the Ranger and the Drake
The Fight Between the Bon Homme Richard and the Serapis
Daniel Boone
Boone’s Escape from the Indians
Boonesborough
Boone Throwing Tobacco into the Eyes of the Indians Who Had Come to Capture Him
James Robertson
Living-Room of the Early Settler
Grinding Indian Corn
A Kentucky Pioneer’s Cabin
John Sevier
A Barbecue of 1780
Battle of King’s Mountain
George Rogers Clark
Clark on the Way to Kaskaskia
Clark’s Surprise at Kaskaskia
Wampum Peace Belt
Clark’s Advance on Vincennes
George Washington
Washington’s Home, Mount Vernon
Tribute Rendered to Washington at Trenton
Washington Taking the Oath of Office as First President, at Federal Hall, New York City
Washington’s Inaugural Chair
Eli Whitney
Whitney’s Cotton-Gin
A Colonial Planter
A Slave Settlement
Thomas Jefferson
Monticello,
the Home of Jefferson
A Rice-Field in Louisiana
A Flatboat on the Ohio River
House in New Orleans Where Louis Philippe Stopped in 1798
A Public Building in New Orleans Built in 1794
Meriwether Lewis
William Clark
Buffalo Hunted by Indians
The Lewis and Clark Expedition Working Its Way Westward
Andrew Jackson
The Hermitage,
the Home of Andrew Jackson
Fighting the Seminole Indians, under Jackson
Robert Fulton
Fulton’s First Experiment with Paddle-Wheels
The Clermont
in Duplicate at the Hudson-Fulton Celebration, 1909
The Opening of the Erie Canal in 1825
The Ceremony Called The Marriage of the Waters
Erie Canal on the Right and Aqueduct over the Mohawk River, New York
Tom Thumb,
Peter Cooper’s Locomotive Working Model, First Used near Baltimore in 1830
Railroad Poster of 1843
Comparison of DeWitt Clinton
Locomotive and Train, the First Train Operated in New York, with a Modern Locomotive of the New York Central R.R.
S.F.B. Morse
The First Telegraph Instrument
Modern Telegraph Office
The Operation of the Modern Railroad is Dependent upon the Telegraph
Sam Houston
Flag of the Republic of Texas
David Crockett
The Fight at the Alamo
John C. Frémont
Frémont’s Expedition Crossing the Rocky Mountains
Kit Carson
Sutter’s Mill
Placer-Mining in the Days of the California Gold Rush
John C. Calhoun
Calhoun’s Office and Library
Henry Clay
The Birthplace of Henry Clay, near Richmond
The Schoolhouse in the Slashes
Daniel Webster
The Home of Daniel Webster, Marshfield, Mass.
Henry Clay Addressing the United States Senate in 1850
Abraham Lincoln
Lincoln’s Birthplace
Lincoln Studying by Firelight
Lincoln Splitting Rails
Lincoln as a Boatman
Lincoln Visiting Wounded Soldiers
Robert E. Lee
Lee’s Home at Arlington, Virginia
Jefferson Davis
Thomas J. Jackson
A Confederate Flag
J.E.B. Stuart
Confederate Soldiers
Union Soldiers
Ulysses S. Grant
Grant’s Birthplace, Point Pleasant, Ohio
General and Mrs. Grant with Their Son at City Point, Virginia
William Tecumseh Sherman
Sherman’s March to the Sea
Philip H. Sheridan
Sheridan Rallying His Troops
The McLean House Where Lee Surrendered
General Lee on His Horse, Traveller
Cotton-Field in Blossom
A Wheat-Field
Grain-Elevators at Buffalo
Cattle on the Western Plains
Iron Smelters
Iron Ore Ready for Shipment
MAPS
Table of Contents
Boston and Vicinity
The War in the Middle States
The War in the South
Early Settlements in Kentucky and Tennessee
George Rogers Clark in the Northwest
The United States in 1803, after the Louisiana Purchase (Colored)
Jackson’s Campaign
Scene of Houston’s Campaign
Frémont’s Western Explorations
Map of the United States Showing First and Second Secession Areas (Colored)
Route of Sherman’s March to the Sea
The Country Around Washington and Richmond
STORIES OF LATER AMERICAN HISTORY
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I
PATRICK HENRY
Table of Contents
Return to Table of Contents
The Last French War had cost England so much that at its close she was heavily in debt.
As England must now send to America a standing army of at least ten thousand men to protect the colonies against the Indians and other enemies,
the King, George III, reasoned, it is only fair that the colonists should pay a part of the cost of supporting it.
The English Parliament, being largely made up of the King’s friends, was quite ready to carry out his wishes, and passed a law taxing the colonists. This law was called the Stamp Act. It provided that stamps—very much like our postage-stamps, but costing all the way from one cent to fifty dollars each—should be put upon all the newspapers and almanacs used by the colonies, and upon all such legal papers as wills, deeds, and the notes which men give promising to pay back borrowed money.
A kingly fellow draped in ermine.George III.
When news of this act reached the colonists they were angry. It is unjust,
they said. "Parliament is trying to make slaves of us by forcing us to pay money without our consent. The charters which the English King granted to our forefathers when they came to America make us free men just as much as if we were living in England.
In England it is the law that no free man shall pay taxes unless they are levied by his representatives in Parliament. We have no one to speak for us in Parliament, and so we will not pay any taxes which Parliament votes. The only taxes we will pay are those voted by our representatives in our own colonial assemblies.
They were all the more ready to take this stand because for many years they had bitterly disliked other English laws which were unfair to them. One of these forbade selling their products to any country but England. And, of course, if they could sell to no one else, they would have to sell for what the English merchants chose to pay.
Another law said that the colonists should buy the goods they needed from no other country than England, and that these goods should be brought over in English vessels. So in buying as well as in selling they were at the mercy of the English merchants and the English ship owners, who could set their own prices.
But even more unjust seemed the law forbidding the manufacture in America of anything which was manufactured in England. For instance, iron from American mines had to be sent to England to be made into useful articles, and then brought back over the sea in English vessels and sold to the colonists by English merchants at their own price.
Do you wonder that the colonists felt that England was taking an unfair advantage? You need not be told that these laws were strongly opposed. In fact, the colonists, thinking them unjust, did not hesitate to break them. Some, in spite of the laws, shipped their products to other countries and smuggled the goods they received in exchange; and some dared make articles of iron, wool, or other raw material, both for their own use and to sell to others.
We will not be used as tools for England to make out of us all the profit she possibly can,
they declared. We are not slaves but free-born Englishmen, and we refuse to obey laws which shackle us and rob us of our rights.
So when to these harsh trade laws the Stamp Act was added, great indignation was aroused. Among those most earnest in opposing the act was Patrick Henry.
Let us take a look at the early life of this powerful man. He was born in 1736, in Hanover County, Virginia. His father was an able lawyer, and his mother belonged to a fine old Welsh family.
But Patrick, as a boy, took little interest in anything that seemed to his older friends worth while. He did not like to study nor to work on his father’s farm. His delight was to wander through the woods, gun in hand, hunting for game, or to sit on the bank of some stream fishing by the hour. When not enjoying himself out-of-doors he might be heard playing his violin.
Of course the neighbors said, A boy so idle and shiftless will never amount to anything,
and his parents did not know what to do with him. They put him, when fifteen years old, as clerk into a little country store. Here he remained for a year, and then opened a store of his own. But he was still too lazy to attend to business, and soon failed.
Patrick Henry.
When he was only eighteen years old, he married. The parents of the young couple, anxious that they should do well, gave them a small farm and a few slaves. But it was the same old story. The young farmer would not take the trouble to look after his affairs, and let things drift. So before long the farm had to be sold to pay debts. Once more Patrick turned to storekeeping, but after a few years he failed again.
He was now twenty-three years old, with no settled occupation, and with a wife and family to support. No doubt he seemed to his friends a ne’er-do-well.
About this time he decided to become a lawyer. He borrowed some law-books, and after studying for six months, he applied for permission to practise law. Although he passed but a poor examination, he at last was started on the right road.
He succeeded well in his law practice, and in a few years had so much business that people in his part of Virginia began to take notice of him. In 1765, soon after the Stamp Act was passed by the British Parliament, he was elected a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses, a body not unlike our State Legislature.
PATRICK HENRY’S FIERY SPEECH AGAINST THE STAMP ACT
Table of Contents
History gives us a vivid picture of the young lawyer at this time as he rides on horseback along the country road toward Williamsburg, then the capital of Virginia. He is wearing a faded coat, leather knee-breeches, and yarn stockings, and carries his law papers in his saddle-bag. Although but twenty-nine, his tall, thin figure stoops as if bent with age. He does not look the important man he is soon to become.
When he reaches the little town of Williamsburg, he finds great excitement. Men gather in small groups on the street, talking in anxious tones. Serious questions are being discussed: What shall we do about the Stamp Act?
they say. Shall we submit and say nothing? Shall we send a petition to King George asking him for justice? Shall we beg Parliament to repeal the act, or shall we take a bold stand and declare that we will not obey it?
Not only on the street, but also in the House of Burgesses was great excitement. Most of the members were wealthy planters who lived on great estates. So much weight and dignity had they that the affairs of the colony were largely under their control. Most of them were loyal to the mother country,
as they liked to call England, and they wished to obey the English laws as long as these were just.
Patrick Henry Delivering His Speech in the Virginia House of Burgesses.
So they counselled: Let us move slowly. Let nothing be done in a passion. Let us petition the King to modify the laws which appear to us unjust, and then, if he will not listen, it will be time to refuse to obey. We must not be rash.
Patrick Henry, the new member, listened earnestly. But he could not see things as these older men of affairs saw them. To him delay seemed dangerous. He was eager for prompt, decisive action. Tearing a blank leaf from a law-book, he hastily wrote some resolutions, and, rising to his feet, he read them to the assembly.
We can easily picture the scene. This plainly dressed rustic with his bent shoulders is in striking contrast to the prosperous plantation owners, with their powdered hair, ruffled shirts, knee-breeches, and silver shoe-buckles. They give but a listless attention as Henry begins in quiet tones to read his resolutions. Who cares what this country fellow thinks?
is their attitude. "Who is he anyway?